The Twilight Zone excelled in telling tales of terror, exploring the darkest aspects of human existence in myriad ways. To celebrate the Halloween season, we’re counting down the 31 most frightening and unsettling moments from The Twilight Zone, one for each day of October. We’ll be revisiting some of the episodes we’ve already covered and looking ahead to episodes from the final three seasons of the series. -JP
#14 - Nightmares in Wax, from “The New Exhibit,” season four, episode 115
Written
by Jerry Sohl (credited to Charles Beaumont), directed by John Brahm, starring
Martin Balsam
“The New Exhibit” is another grim
offering on the series that walks the tightrope between supernatural and
psychological horror. The story is cloaked in just enough ambiguity to conceal
the true nature of the narrative and works equally well as a story of murderous
wax figures imbued with life or as a story of a man in the middle of a
homicidal breakdown unable to accept his horrid deeds. Horror stories revolving
around wax effigies, particularly the effigies of famous murderers, was a
well-worn theme by the time the series approached the material for an hour-long
episode of the fourth season (see A.M. Burrage’s oft-adapted 1931 story “The
Waxwork,” and the silent film Waxworks (1924)).
There are some motifs of the horror story, ventriloquist dummies being another
example, which are both enduring and versatile. “The New Exhibit” is one of the
most evenly paced offerings from a generally uneven fourth season and
consistent director John Brahm handles the proceedings effectively and without
distracting flourishes. Brahm’s use of a perspective framing shot for the climactic
moment in which the wax figures slowly come alive and move off their pedestals
is brilliantly staged, giving the sequence the feeling of a picture coming
horribly to life. Though some commentators have suggested “The New Exhibit”
would be more appropriate for a series such as The Alfred Hitchcock Hour or Thriller
(series which frequently presented stories of supernatural suspense), this
notion flies in the face of the fact that The
Twilight Zone frequently traveled along the paths of the horror story. One could
argue that more horror stories were presented on the series than were science
fiction stories, considering that the series rarely concerned itself with
scientific inquiry and typically used the fantasy construct inherent in the
science fiction story for its own purposes. One need only look to episodes such
as “The Hitch-Hiker,” “The Howling Man,” “The Dummy,” or “The Masks” (or any
others on this countdown) to see that the series was equally adept at the tale
of supernatural terror as with any other type of tale, and perhaps more so.
Trivia:
-“The New Exhibit” is the first of three
episodes of the series which were ghost-written by science fiction author Jerry
Sohl and presented as the work of regular series writer Charles Beaumont. Beaumont
became very ill from an aggressive form of mental degeneration that has been
attributed to everything from early onset Alzheimer’s to lead poisoning. Beaumont
soon lost his ability to write but had acquired numerous writing assignments including
work for The Twilight Zone. In an
effort to honor his commitments and continue to provide for his family,
Beaumont entered into an agreement with his friend Jerry Sohl in which Sohl
would provide scripts for The Twilight
Zone under Beaumont’s name for fifty percent of the payment. Sohl, himself
an accomplished writer for television, agreed to this arrangement largely
because the Beaumont household had begun to struggle financially under the
burden of Beaumont’s debilitating illness. What remains unclear, even at this
late a date, is what, if anything, Beaumont contributed to the three teleplays,
which also included the fifth season episodes “Living Doll” and “Queen of the
Nile,” this latter episode a virtual remake of Beaumont’s first season episode,
“Long Live Walter Jameson.”
I just have a vague memory of this one but I always love a good story involving waxworks! They are so creepy!
ReplyDeleteMost of the episode proves itself at least as chilling as comparatively "Perchance To Dream" and "The Dummy". The wax figures in action commiting all those murders is a nightmarish sight in itself, and never is the viewer bored or uninvolved. What's more, this is a standout amongst the otherwise humid fourth season assortment, almost....but as various reviewers have noted, and it pains me to cite their justifyable observations as to the resolution of the show, I just can't help but agree that perhaps Jerry Sohl couldn't think up who should get the rap for the murders, so it was a hurried choice but to lay them, and we know it was absolutely not doable, at Senescu's door. HE didn't commit the murders. This episode could have taken four stars, but for that slapdash ending, all it can have is three. But it remains a remarkable exception in a doleful season of padded, stretchy episodes.
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